Ridley Road is an intriguing short TV mini-series (of four episodes) from the BBC, which we watched on Masterpiece Theater on PBS. It is fictional, and based on the 2014 novel Ridley Road by Jo Bloom, which in turn was loosely based on real historical situations, groups and people in early 1960s England.
Just coming of age in a still-traumatized Britain two decades after World War II, Vivien Epstein, a modest young Jewish woman (played very ably by Agnes O'Casey), with working class roots and a part of her family living in East London, follows a new boyfriend (Tom Varey) into the anti-fascist resistance against a fast-growing neo-Nazi political group known as the National Socialist Movement (NSM), led by Colin Gordan (Rory Kinnear).
The secret organization she joins, known as the 62 Group, is composed of Jewish people who band together to protect the Jewish community from NSM-led street violence and attacks, a rising tide of mayhem and hate against Jews which they fear is both unrecognized and not of any real concern to the British police and government. The group's initial acts of resistance to this neo-Nazi threat are to try to inform the authorities of what Gordan and his neo-fascist thugs are doing, but when no help is forthcoming from the police, the group organizes its own defenses and combatants to fight the NSM in the streets.
Sensing that they need more inside information, though, Vivien and her boyfriend volunteer to go undercover to infiltrate the NSM. Vivien sets out to gain access to the NSM's highly secretive inner circle, masquerading as an enthusiastic if naive recruit, and ultimately works her way into Gordan's confidence, his home and his family.
Most spy thrillers involve agents who work for government agencies, but this unusual and absorbing drama of England and London in 1962 manages plenty of tension, danger and action in the course of its four episodes, while telling a believable story of a risky self-directed spying operation carried out by civilian amateurs.
It's a story that also has plenty of resonance in our own time, as we watch private far right-wing armies and paramilitary groups becoming larger, stronger and more emboldened in their violent tactics and hateful objectives. Recommended.
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